[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 6 (Monday, January 11, 2016)]
[House]
[Page H259]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
INTRUSION SOFTWARE AND THE WASSENAAR ARRANGEMENT
(Mr. LANGEVIN asked and was given permission to address the House for
1 minute and to revise and extend his remarks.)
Mr. LANGEVIN. Mr. Speaker, securing our networks from cyber attack is
a challenging task. One of the most effective techniques is penetration
testing, or turning hacking tools on one's own network to find
weaknesses before bad actors have a chance to exploit them.
Unfortunately, a rule proposed by the Bureau of Industry and Security
within the Department of Commerce last May has the potential to make it
much harder to share existing tools and develop new ones, which could
severely harm our national security and our economic competitiveness.
The rule was issued as part of the addition of ``intrusion software''
to the Wassenaar Arrangement, one of the principal international export
control regimes. Perhaps unsurprisingly, using a 20-year-old
framework--itself the successor of a three-quarter-century-old cold war
agreement--to regulate cutting-edge technology has proved difficult.
However, I am very thankful for the Bureau's willingness to reexamine
the initial proposal, and I am looking forward to tomorrow's Homeland
Security hearing as an important step in the process to produce a final
rule that allows defenders to test their networks before they are
attacked. This is a bipartisan hearing tomorrow, and I look forward to
tomorrow's hearing.
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